Tag Archive for: Aristotle

The Theogony of Hesiod: Order (Cronos) from Chaos
One of the nice things that you found as you studied more advanced civilizations, as you got further into the first millennium BCE, you had better material and source texts to work with. You no longer had to rely on texts and tablets that…

The Mad Hatter
We chase these dreams
We run from these demons
In this grand illusion
This great game
That has been set before us
So many of us
Find all sorts of reasons
Causes and excuses
Why this is that
Why things are not where we want
Why we have been…

Beginner’s Mind
The odd thing
Is that every Westerner
Approaches the practice of meditation
With a goal in mind
Without exception
The even odder thing
Is that from an Eastern point of view
[Particularly Daoist/Zen Buddhist
Which are very related and symbiotic…

The Great Cave of the Mind
So many teachings
So many schools
So many methods
So many philosophies
So many religions and creeds
There is no end really
As there exist different societies and nations
All throughout the world
There will always be different methods
Which…

Reason and Logic: The Precursors to Science
It's clear in studying early religion and philosophy that mythology and cosmology in antiquity was not only theological in nature, but also had a political motive as well. But at some point in antiquity there was a break from which reason and knowledge was…

Stoic Philosophy in Antiquity: Its Origins, Metaphysics and Ethical Principles
Introduction
Consistent across all of the Hellenistic philosophical schools was the importance of the Soul, the distinction of the human soul as having the capability to reason (what came to be known as logos, a very important term in early…

Middle Platonism: Greek Philosophic Adolescence
Despite the emergence of metaphysics as we know it today in classical Greece, seen most clearly in the (interpretation of) the dialogues of Plato and then more clearly elucidated in the work of Aristotle, a product of Plato’s Academy, and…

The Soul of Plato: The Seat of Logos
The lasting contribution of the Greeks to the West is not only in their political philosophy, they are of course given credit for the creation of democracy, but with their philosophical tradition in itself, from which their politics emerge really.…

Einstein and Spacetime: It’s all Relative
At this point, Charlie had enough material and had performed enough research to establish the core part of his thesis no doubt, illustrating what at least from his perspective seemed the clear borrowing and synthesis of various religious and…

The Enlightenment: The Tree of Knowledge Takes Root
After the fall of the Roman Empire and into the middle and latter part of the Middle Ages in the West, mainly in the period from the 11th century CE until the end of the Renaissance and the advent of the Scientific Revolution, the beginning…